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Carnies
The
people: children, fathers, mothers; moved across the parking field as if
possessed by the lights that glowed, dimmed, and glowed again behind the
intervening pines. They wore sports clothes and some carried babies. Tom moved
with them. He had been coming to the county fair since he could remember but
the colors had not been leached out of its attraction as had happened to other
parts of childhood he loved. It was not because the fair only came once a year;
Christmas happened once a year, yet he had grown tired of Christmas.
He
took Jessie’s arm at the crossroads. She shook it off automatically. The cop
stopped traffic and they crossed with the others, bought tickets at the gate,
Tom holding one arm with studied carelessness over the pocket of his baseball
vest so the beercan inside wouldn’t show; then they were walking down a dusty
trail toward the midway. The smell of funnel cakes, onions, and Milky Way bars,
all fried, made Tom’s stomach feel empty. He looked at Jessie and his awareness
that this was the second county fair they had been to together was big in him.
It made him feel grown up, committed. Even now, after a year and a half, the
curve of her cheekbones still did that thing to him. Her eyes, which were a
little tilted and always a third closed, made her look like she had just woken
up and was dreaming about something better. Her thinness had not changed, and
the way she crossed her arms under her breasts as if she were cold, even in
July; and how she bent a little at the knees when she laughed or listened to
music, all seemed to mix with the hunger in his stomach but it was not a bad
feeling.
He
said, “You probably don’t want any of this,” pointing to a chowder and fried
clams stand and she shook her head, not looking at him, and said “You go ahead
though,” and he said, “No, I’m not hungry,” then wondered what had possessed
him to lie.
They
passed the farm pens—the smell of cowshit mighty in summer warmth, a
loudspeaker announcing something at the paddock—and entered the midway at the
closest entrance, where the toddler rides set up. It was early, just after
dusk. A lot of families with younger children had been and gone, Tom and
Jessie’s age-group mostly would come later, and the carnies had little to do
but call to them. “Come on, chief, win a big tiger for your girl.” “Give it a
whirl, two bucks a shot, three for five.” Most of the carnies smoked and it
seemed to Tom they all moved quicker, more nervously than normal people as they
arranged bottles and duck targets or counted change. Maybe the flash of lights,
the tinny music played too fast caused them to move that way, he thought. One
of them, a thin man with deep smile wrinkles, dyed hair and tats up his arms
and neck, was leaning against the side of a rifle-range booth as they walked by.
“Come on little lady, bet you a free turn you can beat boyfriend here,” and he
pushed himself upright with one of those quick movements, making coins jingle
in the little apron they wore to keep the money in. Tom stepped behind Jessie
and moved to her other side, putting himself between her and the carnie, taking
her arm in his, saying “No thanks,” but not very loud. The carnie laughed.
Jessie shrugged, and shook Tom’s arm away again.
Twenty
paces on he saw a water-pistol game he remembered from last year, the one where
you shot at jungle animals, only the targets were so badly painted that the
lions, monkeys, zebras all looked like dogs. It was run by a fat guy who called
to them without much conviction while his assistant, or daughter, a gum-chewing
black-haired girl not much older than Tom, played with her cellphone. Tom had
won an alarm clock here last summer and he slowed almost involuntarily and Jess
said “OK” without his even asking, and they both put two dollars down. When
three more people had come along, an older couple and a middle-school boy, the
fat man collected their money, dumped it in his apron, and rang a buzzer. Tom
lined up his pistol the way they did on “Call of Duty” and Jessie held hers the
same, left hand cupping right for stability on the recoil. His heart sped up,
even though this was just a game, even though the stuff that was not a game was
all around them and shading everything and he knew that and hoped it would not
affect his aim. The buzzer sounded again, water pissed out of the pistols and
he directed his stream at the target, a dog-wildebeest with a bull’s eye
painted over its heart. He glanced rightward quickly to see how Jessie was
doing, noticing her eyes tilted more than usual as she squinted; it was a
mistake, even that one glance caused his stream to waver, only half a second
but it was enough. Jessie’s target reached the top before his, just after the
kid’s. The boy chose a blue elephant the size of a softball. The couple
wandered off, giggling. A mom and two younger kids showed up then. Jessie held
onto her pistol and put down two more bucks so he took change out of his pocket
and paid too. This time her giraffe got to the top first. The bell rang and the
gum-chewing girl, without looking up from her phone, handed Jess a six-inch
panda with silver fur. It didn’t look much like a panda, Tom thought, but at
least it didn’t look like a dog. Jessie turned toward him, the smile
emphasizing her cheekbones; she hugged the silver panda to her breasts, her
knees a little bent, and Tom thought then he would love her forever, this thing
in his chest that was his love for her must warm him through all the cold and
hard times life threw at them and everyone would see that and it would be OK.
The
big rides were the next alley over, and when they left the water-pistol game
Tom knew he was being pulled that way; he always was. Most high-school kids
were, most of them paid the eight tickets it cost to ride the Wipeout, the
Tilter-whirl, the Hurricane even. The boys all did the Terminator but a lot of
girls would not, and almost no girls rode the Zipper, except for butch ones
like Sammie Sabo. But Jess did. Jessie went on every ride at the county fair
and he was proud of her for that. Without looking at the other, one of them
turned into a dark space separating the water-pistol game from the next, Tom
wasn’t sure if it was him or Jessie moved first but whoever stepped that way
the other followed like they had the same idea at the same time: around a small
and banging generator, over power cables and discarded beer cans, straight into
light where the long counterweighted arms of these rides launched you fifty
feet into thin air, spun you upside down, whipped you sideways so fast your
cheeks sagged; where they glowed within chains of multicolored bulbs, rose
slowly then dropped in sickened free-fall, rocketed in capsules full of
open-mouthed faces pinned by safety bars, and the blare of electric guitars
from speakers three times louder than the screams or music from elsewhere.
They
had emerged near the Zipper. A couple dozen people stood in line for the ride,
including Pete Ryan and Shawne Cazeault, who both waved. Tom nodded back. Then
he waved because though it was pretty cool to be with Jessie, who was
definitely one of the three or four hottest girls in their grade, it was not so
cool that he could just nod at Pete Ryan, who was on the varsity basketball
squad and was going steady with Kim Lobel, who was friends with Jess. Tom
wondered if Kim knew, and if that meant Pete Ryan knew, but Pete was digging in
Shawne’s pocket and Shawne was punching him off which seemed pretty
lighthearted, so maybe they didn’t. Tom and Jessie walked down the line and
when they got to the end looked at each other. “You wanna start with this one?”
Tom asked. “Why not?” she said.
They
both knew why not: a certain ritual was involved in the county fair, you worked
your way up to the biggest rides, partly because the fair was like a story in
which it was best to start slow, like they had with the water-pistol game, and
then maybe progress to the air-rifle range, and then the Ferris wheel or the
Orbiter, unless you were with a date you weren’t too sure about and you waited
to do that later, when you could get a cage to yourselves and put your arm
around her and see if she’d make out. The power rides came last, when the guys
showed off by doing them alone; though if you were lucky enough to date a girl
like Jessie who would ride the scary ones you made sure she was on the inside,
and that was perfect: for as the ride wound up, spinning the cage faster,
centrifugal force would jam her willy-nilly into your arms.
They
stood in the Zipper line. The cages filled. One of the carnies closed the
entrance gate and climbed down to check the chute through which the arms would
swing. He bent to pick up quarters from the dirt. When he climbed back the
other carnie pressed a button, a buzzer ripped and the big arms began to move,
like a windmill carrying two blades opposite each other and the people in cages
at the end. The cages swung ever more quickly in a broad vertical circle and
the boys yelled, obscenities mostly. Everyone in the line looked upward,
smiling in a shared excitement. Their faces shone red, then yellow, blue, with
more or less intensity as the lights on those arms flashed on and off, and one
steel arm swung close to earth as the other rose heavenward. A girl was up
there, Tom could hear her high-pitched keen increase in volume and see her
hair, black and shiny, falling the wrong way for a few seconds as the cage she was
in swiveled, swooped low, wooshed in then out of the chute ten feet from their
queue. Seeing her hair like that triggered an image of Jessie in his mind, the
second time they went all the way, when she was on top (which they hadn’t done
before) but bending over him and her hair fell almost the same way, a smooth
rippling curtain of coffee brown.
He
had forgotten his fear, watching the others. Now it came back the way his
thoughts always did, flashing, swooping, bringing more, dragging in images like
the porch at Jessie’s house which was the last place he’d seen her parents,
when she’d invited him to their Memorial Day barbecue. He remembered how her
mother smiled in a way that was not mean exactly but it didn’t do what a smile
was supposed to do: what Jessie’s did, opening her face. What Mom’s did too
most of the time, though Mom also had the other smile, fixed and tired and
locking her back when she was angry or sad, the way it did when his Dad called,
or the bank. It would be how she smiled when he told her, if he ever did, what
someday he would probably have to tell her anyway.
He
wasn’t sure where the next thought came from. The girl upside down in that
cage, the memory of Jessie’s body, how soft and delicate she’d seemed; how he
worried, after the first time, he might have hurt her. How Mom used to joke
about soap operas, and the stuff you could always predict: the politician would
sleep with the rich guy’s wife, the sexpot would fall for the scoundrel, the
rich guy would shove his wife down the stairs and she would lose the baby.
Jessie
was watching the ride, her silver panda pinched in one elbow. When she smiled
the freckles she hated, that washed in with summer, shone brightly along her
cheeks. Her front teeth just nipped her lower lip and he could tell, by that,
she was not as cool about this ride as she made out and this surprised him. She
shouldn’t do the Zipper, he thought, the same thing could happen to her as
happened to the rich guy’s wife. But his fear took that thought and flipped it
somehow so that a spurt of relief, not fear, surged in right afterward.
It
would solve everything.
Tom
looked back at the ride without seeing it. He was sweating, though the night
had cooled. He shrugged off his baseball vest. Its weight on one side reminded
him of the beer, which he took out. “Better drink this now,” he said, angling
away from the carnies, since alcohol was not permitted at the fair and they
weren’t legal anyway. She looked at him. He popped the can and licked foam off
its top, thinking that she hadn’t wanted to eat fried food, and she probably
wouldn’t drink beer either because it was bad for her and here he was offering
her alcohol, standing in line for a ride that was a lot like falling
downstairs, for a girl. And he was letting her, though with Jessie you didn’t
exactly “let” her or tell her to do anything or she would get mad so it was out
of his hands maybe.
She
grabbed the can then and, tilting her head back, took a long swig. The words
looped in Tom’s head: It’s out of my hands.
The
ride slowed, stopped. People climbed out, laughing, dizzy, stumbling sideways
through the exit. Tom and Jessie shuffled forward. He wasn’t sure what she
wanted to do, but if he didn’t say anything it would still be his fault if it
happened this way. It would be like what the rich guy did. He wasn’t hungry
anymore. He felt sick and he thought, if I go on that ride now I’ll be one of
those wimps who hurls and the slipsteam will make the vomit spew everywhere and
the carnies will have to stop the ride and hose it off; he’d seen it happen on
the Tilter-whirl. Sean and Pete would laugh their guts out and tell everyone at
school. Abruptly he grabbed the beer from Jessie’s hands and she said “Hey!”
and bent a little at the knees. “You,” he began, “you just—“ and saw, or heard
maybe, doors slamming shut down the long long corridor in front of him that was
the rest of his life.
“You
shouldn’t,” he said at last.
She
straightened.
“What.”
“You
know.” He found her eyes. “You just shouldn’t.”
Her
gaze was more tilted than ever.
“What,
drink beer?”
He
shrugged. “No. I mean, yes. And the ride. You know.” He looked around. The
couple in front of them was talking but the people behind were silent and
probably listening to everything he said. He moved closer to Jessie, spoke
lower, almost inaudibly against the blaring pop, the screams that grew and
faded with every turn of the nearby rides. “You know why,” he said again.
Her
eyes stayed on his, very long and steady. They seemed more tilted than before.
Then
she said, “Jesus. You know nothing, Tom. You really know nothing.”
She
turned away from him, crossing her arms under her breasts. Her breasts weren’t
big but they looked bigger when she crossed her arms that way. The ride slowed.
The line advanced. The carnie taking tickets shut the gate six people away from
them, and the line came to a halt again. They would be in the next group taken.
The other carnie checked the swing-chute. Tom started emptying his jean
pockets.
“What
are you doing?” Jessie asked.
“I
told you,” he said, “last time. You know what the carnies do, they collect the
stuff that falls out when you’re upside down, it’s how they make extra money.”
He dumped some change, his pocket knife and car keys, the remaining ride
tickets in the zip-up breast pocket of his vest. “You should, too,” he said.
Her
gaze was still tilted like that. But her mouth had changed shape, it twitched
on one side as she took coins and dollar bills out of her pockets and handed
them to him. Then she shoved the panda in her jeans, its head sticking above
her beltline like a kangaroo baby.
When
their turn came they climbed into the first cage. They were last in, two
abreast, which meant they would be in front for half the ride, before the
Zipper changed direction, and after that they would be riding backwards. One of
the carnies, a cigarette pasted to his lower lip, clanged the safety bar down
and locked the cage. The edge of his tobacco smoke cut at Tom’s nostrils. The
buzzer sounded. Their cage began slowly to move, forward and up, the flashing
multicolored lights of the county fair falling away beneath, the sounds of
electric guitars and pinball bells and screams from other rides and shouts and
laughs all dwindling as well. The sky darkened before them, stars glowed
brighter above the shine of fair. Tom found Jessie’s hand and held it as the
cage began to spin and soon they were upside down. A boy behind them cursed,
they could hear clinking and rattling against the gridwork, but the boy was
laughing too as his coins shone briefly in the fairground lights, flipping
silver, over and over, as they fell to the ground below.
(first published in Ep;phany Journal, fall 2017)